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Young Cambodians Look Forward to Quizzing Obama — Again


FILE - U.S. President Barack Obama smiles as he takes questions from the floor at the Young Southeast Asian Leaders Initiative (YSEALI) town hall meeting at Taylor's University in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Nov. 20, 2015.
FILE - U.S. President Barack Obama smiles as he takes questions from the floor at the Young Southeast Asian Leaders Initiative (YSEALI) town hall meeting at Taylor's University in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Nov. 20, 2015.

Last year, a video of a young man quizzing the U.S. president was widely shared by Cambodian Facebook users. Commenters expressed pride that the youth, one of their countrymen, had the chance to address Barack Obama directly.

“Since yourself is aging toward a very senior life ... ,” Rithy Odom began his question, inducing laughter from the crowd at Taylor’s University in Kuala Lumpur, and from Obama himself. “What do you want to see from young generations like us when you get old?”

“Well, the first thing I want from young people is to stop calling me old,” Obama responded, triggering laughs and applause.

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“I think the most important thing for young people is that they're not trapped in the past,” he continued, in his typically relaxed fashion.

The exchange, at an event of the Young South East Asian Leaders Initiative (YSEALI), characterized the kind of connection Obama has tried to foster with youths in the region. The U.S. government-run program for bright youngsters is part of efforts to build “people-to-people ties,” which form a key soft-power element of the Obama administration's “pivot” to Asia.

“The YSEALI Summit, as well as the other programs in YSEALI, deepens our engagement with Cambodian young leaders on key regional and global challenges,” said Courtney Woods, a spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in Phnom Penh, looking forward to a similar summit that will be held in September at the Nam Ngum reservoir, just north of the Lao capital, Vientiane.

“[Obama] can be both our friend in a personal communication and be a statesman in public talks,” Odom, now 19, told VOA Khmer. “To me, the best takeaway from him is to be more open-minded, accepting critics and other people’s ideas. It loses you nothing, yet you earn more.”

The summit in Malaysia also involved a workshop connecting fellows and specialists from around the region, plus community work sessions that involved collecting trash on a beach, distributing food to the elderly and planting trees.

FILE - Youths reach to shake hands with U.S. President Barack Obama after his speech at a YSEALI (Young Southeast Asian Leaders Initiative) town hall at Yangon University in Yangon, Nov. 14, 2014.
FILE - Youths reach to shake hands with U.S. President Barack Obama after his speech at a YSEALI (Young Southeast Asian Leaders Initiative) town hall at Yangon University in Yangon, Nov. 14, 2014.

While there are almost 6,000 registered YSEALI members from Cambodia, only a select 200 fellows will attend the upcoming Laos summit, which kicks off September 6, and Obama will again be present.

Chea Kimguech, 24, a third-year-student in economics at Phnom Penh’s Royal University of Law and Economics, told VOA Khmer she finds Obama an inspirational leader.

“I want to know his strategy to lead this multinational country [the U.S.], where people come from different corners of the globe,” Kimguech said, adding that she would also like to quiz the president on how he became the first African-American commander in chief.

Theam Daneath, 23, who works at a bank, praised Obama as a fair leader and said she wanted to get advice from the president on how young Cambodians can help solve their country’s problems, like unequal access to education.

“To be specific, [I want to raise] access to the English language, as Cambodia now is in an integrated ASEAN,” she said, using an acronym for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. “English is our way out.”

Ty Limkosal, 23, an international relations graduate, told VOA Khmer he would like to ask Obama about one of his possible successors. “What would he think if Donald Trump became the next president?” Limkosal said.

Obama will leave office in late January, handing over the presidency to the winner of November's elections — likely between Donald Trump, a real estate tycoon and reality television personality, and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

But, as he said during a YSEALI event in Vietnam in May, Obama intends the program for young leaders to continue, becoming part of his legacy of engagement in Southeast Asia.

“This is something that we’re already planning,” Obama said. “Our expectation is that the next president will want to continue the incredible work that we've done with the YSEALI.”

This report was produced in collaboration with VOA's Khmer service.

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